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Mar 18 2010

3 Ways To Reset When the Day Seems To Be Getting Away From You (Work-Life In Balance?)

Category: executive learnings,how do i?,lifestreaming,social mediajmacofearth @ 4:49 pm

2010 spring break remote working

It is Spring Break for the kids and I have been blessed with the opportunity to work from home for a few days to be close by. What do we do when we are in our office, with deadlines cranking down on us, and emails, voicemails and txt messages pouring in on us? When you feel like the day is slipping away from you, what can you do to reclaim the higher ground?

I sent this tweet to someone earlier today who asked the same question.

"Take a breath, walk away from the computer, put down your top 3 goals for the day, or hour, or week, depending on your time horizon."

The idea of how to return to center and remember what is important and not merely urgent, is a core lesson for the working world. Covey does a great job of putting our activities into quadrants and helping us to see that urgent things are not always important. And sometime the important things that are not urgent can often be neglected. So what's the simplest way to STOP the out of control progression of a working day and REDISCOVER what is actually important?

1. Take a breath. If you do yoga, or want to start, several simple forward bends can be a real refresher. Standing up from the chair and focusing on the breathing and movement of your body for a few minutes.

2. Walk away from the computer. Sounds easy, but we are SO online these days, that sometimes even walking away from the computer is not enough. Leave your phone and your notepad on the desk and step outside. Sometimes, while working within a large company, I would take the stairs to a different floor and do a walk by. Most of the time I didn't see anyone I knew, and it was a good way to put some distance between me and whatever was over-occupying my thoughts. When I did run into a colleague, often that short how-do-ya-do would be enough to refresh my circuits. Of course, if the weather was nice, I would hit the fresh air and contemplate the clouds or stars, depending on the time of day.

3. Put down your top 3 goals. Often we take on too many things. We have a hard time saying no, or maybe, or later. And before we know it, everything is in the urgent and important quadrant and we feel overwhelmed. After we breathe and step away from the process for a minute, it is good to refocus with a minimal number of goals. I like asking myself, "What are the top 3 deliverables for the day?" What do I actually have to deliver to someone today? And I like writing the top 3 on a piece of paper and leaving it out where I can see it. It sounds simple, but when the requests become overwhelming, and I don't know where to start, I can look at my top 3 and figure out how to knock out ONE of them.

That's the thing. You can only deliver one thing at a time. And if everything has the same priority it can be hard to determine which project to work on first. So, pick 3. Then do 1. And stay with 1 until you have finished. Then check the time. Check your other 2 things. And pick the next 1. And do that.

If at any time something more "urgent" comes in for you to do, stop and breathe for a minute. Look at your list. Does the new item replace one of your current to-dos? If it is indeed more important, you can repriorititize and drop one of the other projects.

I have felt overwhelmed many times. And I have not always been able to breathe, walk and reset my way out of the overwhelm. But when I HAVE been able to catch the runaway freight train near the top of the slope, I can often reset, apply the brakes, and move with a much more effective and intentional goal in mind.

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/reset-goals

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Mar 25 2009

Tag Cloud Computing? – Categories, Keywords, SEO, Tags, Getting to Simplicity

Category: executive learnings,social mediajmacofearth @ 10:48 am

The tag cloud is dead.

Cloud computing is merely a new marketing term for web services and support.

How can we simplify our web experience so that what we are paying attention to is what is important in our lives. And how do we filter out the tags (blow away the dark clouds and fog) are obscuring our goals. What exactly should we be paying attention to? It is a question we need to ask ourselves much more often these days. Or we find ourselves looking back on the day and into the night with a lot of work still to get done before we can sleep.

So one of my objectives for 2009 is to Simplify my Tag Cloud. I mean this both physically, mentally and spiritually. Because where the brain and mind are foggy so is our self, so is our core person. And by eliminating the noisy distractions of tweets, tags, feeds and emails, tv shows and advertisements for the better life, news and propaganda about global wars and warming, the better we are at eliminating the clutter of our online data stream, the more effective we will be an accomplishing our tasks and goals.

And in the long run, accomplishing more of your goals is a big deal.

So let me share my uber-tags first. These are not often written down, but in a drawing I did the other day, trying to explain what I am doing to simplify my priorities, I came up with a pretty good short list; TOP TAGS if you will.

  1. work
  2. family
  3. play/creativity
  4. health/exercise
  5. spiritual practice

Now let me compare that with my current "category nav" from this website.

uber.la categories as navigation

uber.la categories as navigation

I think I have them all pretty well slotted with my TOP TAGS. I might need to add a "husband" category of some sort, or a better title than "ho-dad parenting" to cover the entire "family" spectrum. But I pretty much leave my personal work, relationship work, out of my writing. On the blog any way. ;-)

And I might add tennis as it is my main "fun" and "exercise" activity. But it is actually caught in my "about" and "contact" pages. So I need to add my top-of-the-page nav as well.

uber.la's top nav as a tag cloud of life

uber.la's top nav as a tag cloud of life

And so with these added in as cross-tag meta categories I do cover all of my TOP TAGS.

But now, for comparison, let me show you some of the tag cloud structures that I have elsewhere.

delicious top 10 tags for john32mac

delicious top 10 tags for john32mac

And here is the larger list from delicious. The bolder tags have more pages associated with them.

500+ tags on delicious

500+ tags on delicious

And one more from delicious that I really like. On this one, you get to see my entire 560 tags (as of 3-25-09) in order of priority. And as the number of links decreases the type is not only smaller but lighter in color as well.

delicious tag cloud of all tags in descending order

delicious tag cloud of all tags in descending order

And of course I could not fit all 560 tags onto a single screen shot, but you get the idea. And the image links to my delicious pages so you can go see for yourself, if you are interested.

Okay, so here is a cloud of my Twitter tags.

my Tweet-cloud

Oh boy, I need to get something to talk about besides ME! Gosh!

And last example, a random cloud from a blog I frequent.

a tag cloud of mess in my opinion

a tag cloud of mess in my opinion

[Okay, so now I need a big wrap.]

Clouds are dead except for specific uses. But most clouds just do not work in the business space. Because someone would need to go back and clean up the tags on a regular basis. Cause what I call "web 2.0" you call "web2" and the next guy calls "social media." And most sites, business and friendship, do not do any tag cleanup.

In our personal lives tag clean up, and refocus on the BIG TAGS is essential.

Here is something David Foster Wallace said about his writing. "I received 500,000 discrete bits of information today," he once said, "of which maybe 25 are important. My job is to make some sense of it."

And that is our task, dear reader, to filter down the noise from our lives and pay attention to the TOP TAGS. Or as Covey put it in his matrix, the Not-Urgent but Important quadrant.

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/big-tags

See Also: Rolling Stone's bio of David Foster Wallace

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future posts

A Collaborative Space: WebEx, Go-To-Meeting, Skype, Basecamp (Teaming/Meeting Tools)
Twitter Problem: How do you find enough interesting people to follow? Then how do you keep up with them?
The Agile Mind: Construction, Evolution, Care, and Feeding Instructions for Mental Flexibility

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